Virus spread prompts mass slaughter

A total of 1.2 million poultry will be slaughtered to prevent the
further spread of the H5N1 bird flu virus, the Government announced on
Friday.

Secretary for the Environment and Food, Lily Yam Kwan Pui-ying said
the decision for drastic action, to be completed by Monday, was due to the
rapid spread of the virus.

"The fact that infected poultry were found in the New Territories,
Kowloon and Hong Kong Island signifies a rapid spread of the virus," Mrs
Yam said.

By the end of Friday night all the poultry of ten infected food
markets will be destroyed.

The slaughter of every single chicken, goose, duck and quail in the
SAR, likely to be mature enough to be sold within the next few weeks, will
then take place on Saturday.

Mrs Yam also banned all poultry exports from the mainland. "This
does not mean the virus comes from mainland [chicken], because it can be
transmitted by air." However, no infected chicken had been found on any
farm in the SAR, she said.

Hong Kong consumes around 100,000 fresh chickens a day and imports
around 70 per cent of its poultry from the mainland. Poultry on SAR farms
would be dealt with last - on Monday.

Mrs Yam stressed the virus would not affect humans, and was different
from a deadly strain of H5N1 that killed six people in Hong Kong in late
1997 and early 1998, and led to the culling of all 1.4 million of the
territory's poultry, but she said public confidence was a major reason for
taking the decision, which will cost the Government $80 million in
compensation paid to vendors.

"Although the Government and medical experts have been reassuring the
public that the strain of H5N1 poses no health risk, public confidence is
badly shaken as shown by the dwindling poultry sales," she said.

The markets closed down on Friday include a Tai Shing Street market in
Wong Tai Sin, two markets in Tuen Mun, two in Shamshuipo, one in Kwun Tong,
and one in Wan Chai.

The decision to close the seven markets on Friday was made after lab
reports came back on 70 chickens which died yesterday in Wong Tai Sin. One
hundred more died there today.

Three markets were shut down and more than 6,000 chickens slaughtered
on Wednesday after 797 birds died from the virus the previous day.
(South China Morning Post, May 18, 2001)